Distributed order orchestration system that transforms sales products to fulfillment products

ABSTRACT

A distributed order orchestration system provides a plurality of representations of a product, such as a sales-centric representation of a product and a fulfillment-centric representation of a product. The distributed order orchestration system captures an order associated with the product, and creates a sales order based on the sales-centric representation of the product. The distributed order orchestration system then transform the sales order into a fulfillment order, where the fulfillment order is based on the fulfillment-centric representation of the product. As part of the transformation, product information that is associated with the sales order is transformed into product information that is associated with the fulfillment order, using one or more product transformation rules.

FIELD

One embodiment is directed to a computer system generally, and moreparticularly to a computer system for managing an orchestration ofbusiness processes.

BACKGROUND

Order management systems are computer software and/or hardware systemsimplemented by a number of industries to facilitate order entry andprocessing. Companies, such as catalog companies and those utilizingelectronic commerce, use order management systems to receive, processand fulfill customer orders. An order management system makes possiblethe entering of an order via a website shopping cart or data entrysystem. The system typically captures customer-related informationand/or account level information for each order. Credit verification orpayment processing may then be performed to check for available fundsand validate the transaction. Valid orders are processed for warehousefulfillment, including picking, packing and shipping of the orderedgoods or services.

In general, most order management system are designed to have a singlerepresentation of a product end-to-end in an order lifecycle, whichresults in a sales-centric view of the product, and results in afulfillment-centric view of the product being the same on the order.This results in many of the product details that are required for thepurpose of fulfillment also being present on the sales order. When anorder is entered in an order capture system, the fulfillment-relatedproduct details are also included on the order, which results in theorder capture system being required to deal with fulfillment-centriccomplexity.

SUMMARY

One embodiment is directed to a distributed order orchestration systemthat receives a sales order, where the sales order includes a firstrepresentation of a product, and where the sales order is an orderreceived from an order capture system and is in a format used by theorder capture system. The distributed order orchestration system furtherevaluates one or more product transformation rules. The distributedorder orchestration system further transforms the first representationof the product into a second representation of the product based on theone or more product transformation rules. The distributed orderorchestration system further transforms the sales order into thefulfillment order, where the fulfillment order is in a format used bythe distributed order orchestration system. The distributed orderorchestration system further stores the second representation of theproduct within the fulfillment order.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Further embodiments, details, advantages, and modifications will becomeapparent from the following detailed description of the preferredembodiments, which is to be taken in conjunction with the accompanyingdrawings.

FIG. 1 illustrates an example of a distributed order orchestrationsystem according to one embodiment.

FIG. 2 illustrates a block diagram of a system that may implement anembodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 3 illustrates a business process task flow for a decompositionprocess of a distributed order orchestration system, where thedecomposition process includes transforming a sales order into afulfillment order, according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 4 illustrates an architectural flow diagram that depicts aninteraction between components of a decomposition layer of a distributedorder orchestration system, according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 5 illustrates an example attribute-to-product transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 6 illustrates an example context-to-product transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 7 illustrates an example product-to-attribute transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 8 illustrates an example attribute-to-attribute transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 9 illustrates an example context-to-attribute transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 10 illustrates an example product-to-product transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 11 illustrates an example user interface of a distributed orderorchestration system for creating product transformation rules,according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 12 illustrates a flow diagram of the functionality of a producttransformation module according to an embodiment of the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

One embodiment is directed to a distributed order orchestration systemthat provides a plurality of representations of a product, such as asales-centric representation of a product and a fulfillment-centricrepresentation of a product. An order capture system can therefore,capture an order associated with the product, and create a sales orderbased on the sales-centric representation of the product. Thedistributed order orchestration system can then transform the salesorder into a fulfillment order, where the fulfillment order is based onthe fulfillment-centric representation of the product. As part of thetransformation, product information that is associated with the salesorder can be transformed into product information that is associatedwith the fulfillment order, using one or more product transformationrules, and using one or more types of product transformation rules.

Distributed Order Orchestration Framework

One embodiment is directed to a distributed order orchestration system(“DOO”). Distributed order orchestration provides a flexible,configurable infrastructure that can be easily customized to beconsistent with an enterprise's business practices and existing orderfulfillment system architecture. Decomposition is the conversion of datareceived from one or more order capture modules into an internalcanonical format in order to process the data.

FIG. 1 illustrates an example of a distributed order orchestrationsystem 100 according to one embodiment. In the embodiment, distributedorder orchestration system 100 includes a capture layer 110 that canreceive and capture information related to customer orders for goodsand/or services across multiple channels. The order may be captured viaa graphical user interface, such as that of a website shopping cart, orcan be received via any data entry system. Capture layer 110 capturesand forwards the order information to a decomposition layer 120 througha connector. However, in an alternative embodiment, capture layer 110 isseparate from distributed order orchestration system 100. In thisalternative embodiment, a connector service is utilized as a bridgebetween distributed order orchestration system 100 and capture layer110.

Order capture systems capture the order with any necessary functionalattributes that are needed to process the order, such as pricing,validation, eligibility, etc. The sales order is fed to decompositionlayer 120 in the form of a source order. The source order is generatedfrom a sales order submitted by different capture systems. The sourceorder is in a generic format that is fed into decomposition layer 120.

Decomposition layer 120 receives the order information and breaks thereceived order into individual fulfillment requests to be sent tofulfillment systems and supply-side partners for execution.Decomposition layer 120 may include a decomposition rules workbench forsetting up rules, rule sets, and transformation processes. Order capturelayer 110, which captures the order from a sales perspective, can submitthe order to decomposition layer 120 through a decomposition service.For example, a laptop computer may be sold worldwide. The laptopincludes a power cord, but the customer just buys a laptop (one line onthe order). For example, it may be easier for the sales website to justsell or offer the laptop and not have the customer individually selectthe power cord separately. However, from a fulfillment perspective, thelaptop and the power cord are needed in order to fulfill the order. Indecomposition layer 120, there may be a business rule that says that alaptop must have a power cord and the specification of the power cordmust match the country to which the laptop is shipped. Therefore, whendecomposition layer 120 is complete, the order will have two lines, onewith the laptop and one for the appropriate power cord. Thus, the orderhas been decomposed into multiple items that need to be fulfilled.

Also, decomposition layer 120 may take the received order and translateit to the order format and order content required by the other layers ofdistributed order orchestration system 100, such as fulfillment layer160 in one embodiment. Because capture layer 110 is capable of receivingorders in any format for compatibility purposes across different typesof systems, decomposition layer 120 may need to translate the order intoa format that is compatible with and can be recognized by all the otherlayers and/or processes of distributed order orchestration system 100.Additionally, decomposition layer 120 may provide a process launchcapability to assign and launch orchestration processes for an orderbased on appropriate decomposition rules. For example, differentorchestration processes are assigned based on parameters in the order. Acompany may give special treatment to certain customers in terms ofspeed of fulfillment or shipping. For example, “Gold” customers may beoffered expedited shipping. Also, there may be an additional step forcommunication with the customer. When the orders for these customers arereceived, they are assigned to the orchestration process that has theseparameters and steps while orders for other customers may be assigned tostandard processes.

Decomposition may use a canonical object model to accomplish thedecoupling of data format from order capture systems. Decompositionintegration processes work on a set of generic data structures calledEnterprise Business Objects (“EBO's”), in one embodiment, that are basedon the canonical data model. This approach allows the DOO to be agnosticof participating applications and be independent of source or targetapplications. The model eliminates the need to map data from differentapplications directly to each other.

Distributed order orchestration system 100, as illustrated in FIG. 1,further includes an orchestration layer 130. Orchestration layer 130provides individual orchestration processes to manage good and/orservice line items. For example, orchestration layer 130 may providebusiness process management functionality to support planning of stepswithin a process, including step duration and calculation orrecalculation of completion dates. Orchestration layer 130 may alsoprovide external task execution functionality to support creation,update, release, and monitoring of external tasks. External tasks arethose that are carried out by the fulfillment systems. Task layerservices do specific processing and then send the data to theseintegrated fulfillment systems. Orchestration is a sequence of tasklayer service invocations.

Orchestration layer 130 may also provide for jeopardy management inorder to check a promised delivery date of an order against currentestimated date for completion, map to user defined thresholds, andhandle or escalate conditions. Orchestration layer 130 may furtherprovide a process for change orders, including a support processrollback to accommodate for change order automation and modify in-flightorchestration processes for orders changed in order capture stage.Further, a projected order completion date may be provided byinstantiating the orchestration process. Orchestration layer 130 alsoprovides a mechanism for updating an order status automatically or uponuser request.

One embodiment provides a tool that provides a high degree ofabstraction for business process modeling in an order fulfillmentbusiness process. Business processes may be modeled by users, such asbusiness analysts, and do not need any coding from an informationtechnology (“IT”) designer to have the business process executed. Usersare provided the flexibility to define business processes in a centralplace configured to enter and capture all information required fororchestration and fulfilling an order. An example of such a centralplace can be a web-based administration user interface. Likewise, anexample of all information required for orchestration and orderfulfillment may be information required for process planning, coreorchestration, and change management. The business process may identifyone or more services that define steps to be performed in the orderfulfillment process. A run-time engine then uses the definition todynamically invoke the services based on the definition of the businessprocess.

In the business environment, business users are often process modelers,not IT personnel. By providing a web-based administration environment,the business users may be able to design the business process. Theprocess definitions may be defined in business terms and not in ITterms. Particular embodiments provide an administrative environmentoutside of a code editor, such as a Business Process Execution Language(“BPEL”) editor, for defining processes using associated services. Userscan configure processes that can be executed at runtime as executableprocesses without IT involvement. This alleviates the need for deployingthe processes every time a modification of the business process isneeded. The user sets up the sequence of services on a data table. Themodeled business process is then used to perform an executable process(also identified as an “orchestration process”), which is assembled andexecuted at run-time. In one embodiment, “runtime” can be defined as thetime when an order is received for processing. Metadata is assembled ina data runtime table and used to define the executable process for thebusiness process. The metadata is used to invoke services in theexecutable process.

In one embodiment, the services invoked are encapsulated and reusable.The metadata is used to determine how and when to invoke services. Also,depending on the metadata, input arguments are generated and sent to theservices to invoke the encapsulated service. A common signature is usedto send data to invoke the services. Different input arguments can beformulated for different services used in different executableprocesses. The input arguments are formatted in the same way such that aservice can read the different sets of data and invoke the service.Thus, services can be re-used in different business processes withoutthe need to be recoded and redeployed. Deployment of services indicatesthe process is ready to be released for testing or production.

Distributed order orchestration system 100 may further include a tasklayer services 140 to provide encapsulated services used to controlprocessing logic for each orchestration process stage. In particular,task layer services 140 may provide task-specific business logic to wraplogic around a certain request such that system 100 knows what logicaltasks are associated with a particular request. The steps that need tobe performed in the executable process from orchestration may requiretasks to be performed. For example, task layer services 140 can provideand control processing logic for scheduling a shipment, requesting ashipment, updating an install base, creating an activity, etc. Theoutput of task layer services 140 is a standard goods and/or servicerequest(s) which may be provided to other layers of system 100, such asexternal interface layer 150 or fulfillment layer 160. In addition, tasklayer services 140 may receive input that can be used to update theprocessing logic or status.

Task layer services 140 initiates the task, generates a message for anexternal system, and sends the message. The data structure that isneeded to have the task performed is generated. Certain tasks may bepredefined in task layer services. Also, a customer may add other tasksusing a template that defines how to create a task. The messagegenerated indicates which task should be performed by the externalsystem. The task to be performed is an aspect of order processing thathas been modeled. For example, the task may be invoicing for an order.Parameters for performing the task are also included. The message issent to an external interface of external interface layer 150. Tasklayer services 140 transforms and sends the message to the externalsystem layer.

Distributed order orchestration system 100 also includes an externalinterface layer 150 to translate standard request(s) and route therequest(s) to external systems for processing. More specifically,external interface layer 150 may receive the standard goods and/orservices request(s) output by task layer services 140 and provide asingle layer transform of the request(s) if needed to match the formatof fulfillment systems. The transformation performed by externalinterface layer 150 maps the data to the content and format required bythe integrated fulfillment systems. Transformation by decompositionlayer 120 converts the data to the internal format used by system 100.External interface layer 150 may map the data structure from task layerservices 140 to the external format. External interface layer 150provides flexible routing so that request(s) are routed to specificfulfillment systems based on business rules. For example, if more thanone shipping system is available for fulfillment, business rules willdetermine to which shipping system an individual shipping request willbe sent. External interface layer 150 may also include a transformationrules workbench that can be utilized to setup rules, rule sets, andtransformation data for external routing of request(s).

The messages generated by the task layer may be in a generic format.Different external systems, however, may communicate using otherformats. The external interface layer determines the format used by anexternal system and transforms the message. For example, metadatadefined by a user may be used to determine the format to be used. In oneexample, mappings to what external systems call a product that wasordered are used to translate the message.

The external systems may be systems that perform the task related toprocessing an order, such as a scheduling system, shipping system, etc.When the task is performed, the result of the task is determined. Theresult may be a date when a shipment is scheduled, a date when a good isshipped, etc. The result is then sent back to external interface layer150.

Distributed order orchestration system 100 may further include a globalorder promising layer 170 that provides an interface, such as agraphical user interface, for scheduling and sourcing orders. Inparticular, in one embodiment, global order promising layer 170 includesa sourcing broker that determines the best source for products andservices associated with the order based upon a customer profile, orderand supplier definitions, etc. Also, global order promising layer 170provides for real-time reserve and un-reserve of inventory and inventorycheck across distributed internal systems. The interface of global orderpromising layer 170 allows for the viewing of availability and sourcinginformation so that a user can view the availability of and manuallychange the source from which an order for a good or service is beingfulfilled. However, in an alternative embodiment, global order promisinglayer 170 is separate from distributed order orchestration system 100.In this alternative embodiment, a connector service is utilized as abridge between distributed order orchestration system 100 and globalorder promising layer 170.

A fulfillment workbench 180 may also be provided as a user interface fororder fulfillment administrators, users and supervisors to monitor andmanage the flow of orders through the system 100. In an embodiment,fulfillment workbench 180 provides users, such as supervisors, with amechanism to monitor order fulfillment tasks, including allowingsupervisors to monitor activity load and to produce reports. Fulfillmentworkbench 180 further provides a fulfillment process analysis thatallows business process designers to analyze process metrics such as thenumber of manual interventions, the number and type of errors thatoccurred, the number of late orders, and the expected process durationversus the actual duration. In certain embodiments, a fulfillment systemperformance analysis capability is also included within fulfillmentworkbench 180 to provide reports and dashboards to enable order managersto view orders for each system and analyze performance. The fulfillmentworkbench may make use of graphical representations (e.g., graphs andcharts) to clearly convey system status/order information to users.Because DOO system 100 has the data reference data, it is possible todraw aggregated graphs/charts for trending analysis. Users may takeactions from the fulfillment workbench as described below, such as bysubstituting the item ordered, splitting the quantity into multipleorder lines, putting a hold on the order lines to prevent furtherprogression, etc.

According to one embodiment, fulfillment workbench 180 allows users tomake mass order information changes related to fulfillment includingmaking single line or mass line changes to fulfillment information(e.g., dates, etc.). Fulfillment workbench 180 may further allow for themonitoring of orchestration processes, such as reviewing the status oforchestration processes including overall process progress, as well asstatus of individual tasks and corresponding fulfillment lines andpeople lines. Fulfillment workbench 180, in one embodiment, includesmechanisms for maintaining order fulfillment processing and allows anorder processing user to control a process associated with an orderincluding pause, edit, cancel, etc.

In some embodiments, fulfillment workbench 180 also providesfunctionality for order and task assignment. For example, fulfillmentworkbench 180 may use an assignment engine to assign orders andactivities to the appropriate fulfillment resource. Fulfillmentworkbench 180 may include a mechanism for batch re-assignment of ordersthereby allowing a supervisor to re-source a set of orders from onefulfillment system to another. Fulfillment workbench 180 also providesfor the assignment of fill rate and backorder rules that canautomatically determine how to handle shortage situations. A universalin-box may be included within fulfillment workbench 180 in order toallow users to view activities assigned to them and respond to the task.

Fulfillment workbench 180 allows a user to view orders being processedin different layers of system 100. A view of the status of an order maybe generated from whichever layers have processed the order. This isbecause an end to end integrated system has been provided. Conventionalorder systems may have been customized solutions that did not allow fora view of different layers. By integrating layers in a format thatallows generic communication, a user interface that can generate viewsfrom all the layers can be provided.

Examples of distributed order orchestration system 100 may also includea fulfillment layer 160. In one embodiment, fulfillment layer 160 may bean interface to external fulfillment systems, and can be used tocommunicate order information and fulfillment requirements to a supplieror source of the goods and/or services associated with an order.

Certain embodiments of distributed order orchestration system 100include an administration user interface. The administration userinterface provides administration services that hide the complexity ofthe fulfillment execution environment from the end user. For instance,the administration user interface provide product mapping via anadministration environment that defines transformations to map productstructure between a sales view and a supplier system definition. In thisembodiment, sales view refers to a simplified view provided to consumerswhen placing a sales order. Supplier system definition refers to themore specific and detailed information used by suppliers of goods and/orservices. The administration user interface may also provide anorchestration process workbench to set up processes, rule sets, andparameters for order orchestration. The administration user interfacehas an integrated setup that includes process sequence, planning,jeopardy, change management, and workbench display. The administrationuser interface also allows for user-defined status transitions fortasks, processes, and fulfillment lines, and business rulesconfiguration for configuring constraints, transformation rules, androuting rules.

Further details of a distributed order orchestration system aredescribed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/617,698, entitled“DISTRIBUTED ORDER ORCHESTRATION,” U.S. patent application Ser. No.12/718,585, entitled “CHANGE MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK IN DISTRIBUTED ORDERORCHESTRATION SYSTEM,” and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/697,756,entitled “ORCHESTRATION OF BUSINESS PROCESSES USING TEMPLATES,” thedisclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference.

Transformation of Sales Order to Fulfillment Order

One embodiment is directed to a distributed order orchestration systemthat provides a plurality of representations of a product, such as asales-centric representation of a product and a fulfillment-centricrepresentation of a product. An order capture system can, therefore,capture an order associated with the product, and create a sales orderbased on the sales-centric representation of the product. Thedistributed order orchestration system can then transform the salesorder into a fulfillment order, where the fulfillment order is based onthe fulfillment-centric representation of the product. As part of thetransformation, a representation of a product that is associated withthe sales order can be transformed into a representation of the productthat is associated with the fulfillment order, using one or more producttransformation rules and/or one or more types of product transformationrules. Such a transformation can include a transformation of the entireproduct, a transformation of a context of the product, or atransformation of one or more transaction item attributes of theproduct.

As previously described, most order management systems are designed tohave a single representation of a product end-to-end in an orderlifecycle, which results in a sales-centric view of the product, andresults in a fulfillment-centric view of the product being the same onthe order. This results in many of the product details that are requiredfor the purpose of fulfillment also being present on the sales order.When an order is entered in an order capture system, thefulfillment-related product details are also included on the order,which results in the order capture system being required to deal withfulfillment-centric complexity. Thus, current order management systemslack the functionality to handle a demarcation of a sales-centric viewof the product details from a fulfillment-centric view of the productdetails, and this requires the order to include both sets of details.

As described herein, a “sales order” is an order received from an ordercapture system. When received, the order is in a format that is used bythe order capture system. A format of the order that is used by theorder capture system is an internal representation of the sales order inthat system. A “DOO sales order” is a sales order after it has beentransferred into a format that is utilized by the distributed orderorchestration system. A “source sales order” or “source order” refers toan original sales order that is received by an order capture system andtransformed to an enterprise business object (“EBO”), where an EBO is ageneric data structure that supports cross-application businessprocesses, independent of the source or target applications, and whicheliminates the need to map data directly from one application toanother. A “sales order EBO” is the data structure associated with thesales order. A “sales order enterprise business message” (“EBM”) is theactual message exchanged between two participating applications. A“fulfillment order,” “orchestration order,” or “DOO order” is a salesorder that has been transformed into a format that is used by thedistributed order orchestration system to orchestrate, and ultimatelyfulfill, the sales order. An example of a format that is used by thedistributed order orchestration system is an arrangement of one or moreattributes included within the order, where the arrangement is differentfrom the arrangement associated with an order capture system.

As also described herein, a “product structure” is a structure of aproduct that defines its composition. A “transformation type” is a typeof product transformation rule that defines how an attribute or aproduct included on a sales order transforms into an attribute or aproduct included on a fulfillment order. An “attribute” is a detail thatfurther defines the object and specifies the object's behavior. Anattribute can represent a characteristic or property of an object, suchas a product. A “static item attribute” is an attribute whose value isdefined during the definition of the product, and remains immutablethroughout the downstream business process. A “transaction itemattribute” is an attribute whose value is specified or changed during adownstream business process and/or transaction, as part of the creationor updating of a product occurrence. A “product identity” is anattribute whose value identifies a product. A “business rule” is a rulethat controls operation of an executable process based on business logicand runtime data. Finally, a “representation of a product” or “productrepresentation” is a collection of one or more attributes that togethercan represent a product, and that can be included on either a salesorder or a fulfillment order.

According to an embodiment of the invention, a distributed orderorchestration system provides a plurality of representations of aproduct, such as a sales-centric representation of a product and afulfillment-centric representation of a product. Thus, according to theembodiment, an order capture system of a capture layer of thedistributed order orchestration system can utilize a sales-centricrepresentation of a product in processing a sales order. Furthermore, adecomposition module of a decomposition layer of the distributed orderorchestration system can transform the sales-centric representation ofthe product into a fulfillment-centric representation of the productwhen it transforms the sales order into a fulfillment order. Thus, theone or more fulfillment systems of the fulfillment layer of thedistributed order orchestration system can utilize thefulfillment-centric representation of the product when it processes thefulfillment order as part of orchestrating the captured order.

FIG. 2 illustrates a block diagram of a system 200 that may implementone embodiment of the invention. System 200 includes a bus 202 or othercommunications mechanism for communicating information betweencomponents of system 200. System 200 also includes a processor 214,operatively coupled to bus 202, for processing information and executinginstructions or operations. Processor 214 may be any type of general orspecific purpose processor. System 200 further includes a memory 204 forstoring information and instructions to be executed by processor 214.Memory 204 can be comprised of any combination of random access memory(“RAM”), read only memory (“ROM”), static storage such as a magnetic oroptical disk, or any other type of machine or computer-readable medium.System 200 further includes a communication device 212, such as anetwork interface card or other communications interface, to provideaccess to a network. As a result, a user may interface with system 200directly or remotely through a network or any other method.

A computer-readable medium may be any available medium that can beaccessed by processor 214. A computer-readable medium may include both avolatile and nonvolatile medium, a removable and non-removable medium, acommunication medium, and a storage medium. A communication medium mayinclude computer readable instructions, data structures, program modulesor other data in a modulated data signal such as a carrier wave or othertransport mechanism, and may include any other form of informationdelivery medium known in the art. A storage medium may include RAM,flash memory, ROM, erasable programmable read-only memory (“EPROM”),electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (“EEPROM”),registers, hard disk, a removable disk, a compact disk read-only memory(“CD-ROM”), or any other form of storage medium known in the art.

Processor 214 can also be operatively coupled via bus 202 to a display216, such as a Liquid Crystal Display (“LCD”). Display 216 can displayinformation to the user. A keyboard 218 and a cursor control device 220,such as a computer mouse, can also be operatively coupled to bus 202 toenable the user to interface with system 200.

According to one embodiment, memory 204 can store software modules thatmay provide functionality when executed by processor 214. The modulescan include an operating system 206, a product transformation module208, as well as other functional modules 210. Operating system 206 canprovide an operating system functionality for system 200. Producttransformation module 208 can provide functionality for transforming asales order into a fulfillment order, and further, for transforming arepresentation of a product associated with the sales order into arepresentation of the product that can be associated with thefulfillment order. In certain embodiments, product transformation module208 can comprise a plurality of modules that each provide specificindividual functionality for transforming a sales order into afulfillment order, and further, for transforming a representation of aproduct associated with the sales order into a representation of theproduct that can be associated with the fulfillment order. System 200can also be part of a larger system. Thus, system 200 can include one ormore additional functional modules 210 to include the additionalfunctionality. For example, functional modules 210 may include modulesthat are part of the “Fusion” product from Oracle Corporation. Anexample of a module that is part of the “Fusion” product is adistributed order orchestration module. Functional modules 210 may alsoinclude an enterprise resource planning system such as the “E-BusinessSuite” product from Oracle Corporation.

Processor 214 can also be operatively coupled via bus 202 to a database234. Database 234 can store data in an integrated collection oflogically-related records or files. Database 234 can be an operationaldatabase, an analytical database, a data warehouse, a distributeddatabase, an end-user database, an external database, a navigationaldatabase, an in-memory database, a document-oriented database, areal-time database, a relational database, an object-oriented database,or any other database known in the art.

According to an embodiment, as previously described, a decompositionmodule of a decomposition layer is a first module of a distributed orderorchestration system to receive an order from an order capture system,and thus, is a gateway for the order capture systems to forward a salesorder to the distributed order orchestration system. The decompositionmodule can transform the sales order into a fulfillment order as part ofa decomposition process. During the decomposition process, thedecomposition module can perform the transformation based on one or moreproduct transformation rules within the decomposition module.Subsequently, the decomposition module assigns one or more line items tobe fulfilled to one or more order orchestration processes, and initiatesthe one or more order orchestration processes.

FIG. 3 illustrates a business process task flow for a decompositionprocess of a distributed order orchestration system, where thedecomposition process includes transforming a sales order into afulfillment order, according to an embodiment of the invention.According to the embodiment, the decomposition process involves an ordercapture layer 310, an order capture connection service layer 320, and anenterprise business flow layer 330.

In order capture layer 310, at 301, a sales order is submitted, and isreceived by an order capture system. As previously described,information associated with the submitted sales order is captured andforwarded within a sales order object.

In order capture connector service layer 320, at 302, a connectorservice structurally transfers a structure of the sales order objectinto a canonical object that the distributed order orchestration systemcan operate on (i.e., a sales order EBO). The usage of a sales order EBOallows the distributed order orchestration system to be agnostic to oneor more order capture systems. The connector service can be implementedin BPEL or any other technology that can be used for an integrationlayer between an order capture system and the distributed orderorchestration system.

The transformation can include a structural transformation, an optionalcontent transformation, and an invocation of a decomposition enterprisebusiness service. A structural transformation includes the structuraltransformation of the sales order object into a sales order EBO, aspreviously described. A content transformation includes transformationof business data associated with the sales order object, such asattributes, into business data associated with the sales order EBO, suchas attributes. More specifically, the content transformation includesthe replacement of order-capture-system-specific identifiers with acommon identifier in the event that the order capture system and thedistributed order orchestration system operate on different domainvalues.

According to an embodiment, a product model can be used to transform oneor more attributes, as part of the content transformation. Morespecifically, the distributed order orchestration system can provide across-reference service that accepts a context, an attribute, or a listof attributes along with its associated values, and return thecross-reference output attribute or list of attributes along with itsassociated values. This service can be invoked either from within anExtensible StyleSheet Language Transformation (“XSLT”) mapper or througha BPEL process step.

The decomposition process composition can be exposed as a web servicedefinition language (“WSDL”), and which can be invoked as a service fromthe connector service. The decomposition process can take a sales orderEBM as an input to the process. The decomposition process can be invokedby an order capture system through the connector service for differentbusiness operations.

In certain embodiments, as previously described, the distributed orderorchestration system can use a set of generic data structures (i.e.,EBOs) for receiving and storing the sales order. An EBO serves as acommon data abstraction across different order capture systems. Aconnector service is responsible for transforming the sales order froman order capture format into a canonical format. A decomposition servicecan accept a sales order EBM as input, and return a sales order EBM asoutput.

The sales order EBM includes a header component, a verb component, andan actual business data payload that is required for processing theservice operation. The header of the EBM contains information useful forauditing, traceability, error handling and security. The verb componentidentifies the operation to be performed on the payload of the salesorder EBM such as create, update, delete, cancel, and query.Content-specific sales order EBO definitions can be created byassembling a set of common components and sales order EBO-specificbusiness components. These context-specific EBM definitions can be usedin corresponding content-specific EBMs. Thus, for a sales order EBO,there can be two schema modules, one containing the definition of thesales order EBO, and another containing the definition of thecontext-specific definitions for the sales order EBO.

As previously described, the distributed order orchestration system canreceive a sales order from an order capture system, where the salesorder can be a highly structured extensible markup language (“XML”)document. The sales order can be converted into a source order, wherethe source order can be stored using an XML type. Using an XML type as apersistent storage for the source order allows structured query language(“SQL”) queries on part of or the entire XML document. The source ordercan then be stored in either a structured storage or a binary XMLstorage. A structured storage, also known as a schema-based storage,uses an object-relational model to store one or more XML documentswithin a database. Binary XML storage allows for intermixed data andmetadata. The distributed order orchestration system can useXML-specific SQL functions to query and update content within one ormore XML documents. The distributed order orchestration system can alsoutilize one or more view objects associated with the source order, wherethe one or more view objects can be exposed through a service dataobject.

In decomposition enterprise business flow layer 330, an enterprisebusiness flow invoked by a connector service is processed. Theenterprise business flow can include one or more of the following steps,validate 304, receive 305, transform 306, and assign and launchorchestration process 307. Validate 304 validates the source orderobject. Receive 305 receives the source order object. Transform 306transforms the source order object into a fulfillment order object, asis described below in greater detail. Assign and launch orchestrationprocess 307 assigns the fulfillment order object to an orchestrationprocess (such as orchestration process 309) and initiates theorchestration process.

FIG. 4 illustrates an architectural flow diagram that depicts aninteraction between components of a decomposition layer of a distributedorder orchestration system, according to an embodiment of the invention.According to an embodiment, a sales order is submitted. The sales orderis captured by an order capture system (not illustrated in FIG. 4), andthe order capture system invokes an order capture connector service 410.As previously described, order capture connector service 410structurally transfers a structure of a sales order object thatrepresents the sales order into a canonical object that the distributedorder orchestration system can operate on (i.e., a sales order EBO).

According to the embodiment, order capture connector service 410 invokesa decomposition process 420. As previously described, decompositionprocess 420 transforms the received sales order into a fulfillment order(identified in FIG. 4 as a “DOO order”). As also previously described,this transformation transforms a sales-centric view of the order (i.e.,sales order) into a fulfillment-centric view of the order (i.e.,fulfillment order). As also previously described, this transformationtransforms a representation of a product associated with the sales orderinto a representation of the product associated with the fulfillmentorder based on one or more product transformation rules.

According to the embodiment, there can be a plurality of transformationtypes, and they can be categorized into the following categories toperform the transformation of a sales-centric view of the order (i.e.,sales order) into a fulfillment-centric view of the order (i.e.,fulfillment order): (a) product-to-product transformation; (b)attribute-to-attribute transformation; (c) context-to-attributetransformation; (d) context-to-product transformation; (e)attribute-to-product transformation; and (f) product-to-attributetransformation. The categories of transformation types are describedbelow in greater detail.

In one embodiment, each of the above-identified transformation types canbe implemented using product information management (“PIM”), which caninclude a common product model, a product data hub, and product andcatalog management applications. PIM is described below in greaterdetail. In another embodiment, each of the above-identified types can beimplemented using business rules. Business rules are also describedbelow in greater detail.

According to the illustrated embodiment, at 421, one or more producttransformation rules that are implemented using PIM (i.e., PIM rules, asillustrated in FIG. 4), are applied. More specifically, decompositionprocess 420 can invoke one or more web services 430, where each webservice of the one or more web services 430 can invoke an applicationdevelopment framework (“ADF”) business components (“BC”) service 440 orview object. By invoking the ADF BC service, decomposition process canaccess a PIM entity, where the PIM entity can include a common productmodel, a product catalog, or a combination therein. The PIM entity caninclude PIM product relationships/associations, which can be used torelate/associate a product to one or more product entities stored withinthe PIM entity. Such relationships/associates can include relatedproducts, customer product cross-references, and source system products.In certain embodiments, the PIM entity can be stored in, and retrievedfrom common product model (“CPM”) schema 450.

Related products can be used to define relationships between asales-centric representation of a product and a fulfillment-centricrepresentation of a product. According to the embodiment, when an ordercapture system captures a sales order, decomposition process 420 cantransform the one or more products associated with the sales order, bycalling a PIM service associated with the PIM entity for productrelationships, where the product is associated with a relationship typeof “Fulfillment” and the PIM service can return a corresponding product.Using the relationship type of “Fulfillment,” it is possible to setuprelationships between a sales product and multiple fulfillment productswhere one sales product decomposes to multiple fulfillment products.This type of relationship can be used for simple and one-levelhierarchical relationships between products, and where there is nonested hierarchy. In such a scenario, the PIM service can return themultiple fulfillment products to decomposition process 420, anddecomposition process 420 can add the multiple fulfillment products tothe sales order by replacing the sales product with the multiplefulfillment products. Thus, a representation of a sales product can betransformed into a representation of a fulfillment product. This can bepart of the transformation of the sales order to a fulfillment order.

Customer product cross-references can be used to define cross referencesbetween inventory products and customer products based on a customerproduct number. When a sales order is captured by an order capturesystem, the sales order can be captured based on the customer productnumber, and the customer product number can be what the order capturesystem associated with the sales order. Decomposition process 420 caninvoke a PIM service associated with the PIM entity when given acustomer product, and can provide an internal product associated withthe customer product based on the customer product number.

Source system products can also be cross-referenced to products in acommon product model. This type of relationship can be used whenproducts are brought from disparate systems into a master productinformation repository. The cross-reference can be setup between asource system product and an item in the master product informationrepository, which is part of the common product model. When an ordercapture system captures an order, and when the order capture uses adifferent product from the products indicated in the master productinformation repository, this relationship type can be used tocross-reference products. According to an embodiment, decompositionprocess 420 can lookup the PIM entity where given a product and sourcesystem, and the PIM entity can provide an associated product from thecommon product model. This relationship type can be used duringvalue/content transformations.

The following is a list of services that can be provided by a PIMentity, and which decomposition process 420 can use to transform asales-centric view of an order (i.e., sales order) into afulfillment-centric view of an order (i.e., fulfillment order):

PIM Service PIM Service Request DOO Usage Product Given relationshiptype For transforming a sales Relationships/ and product, provide listproduct to a fulfillment Associations of related products product,decomposition process looks up a “Fulfillment” relationship CustomerGiven customer product, DOO can look into cross- Product Cross- providethe internal references for customer References product products toderive the internal products Source System For a given product, DOO canuse this to cross- Product provide source system reference productsacross Relationships product and vice-versa systems Structure Provide astructure for a DOO can call this service to Explosion given productexplode given product into associated structure Common Given a product,provide Common product model Product Model/ operational attributes holdsthe definition of the Operational products; DOO can look up Attributesthe operational attributes for processing and validation TransactionGiven a product, provide DOO can call this to lookup Item Attributestransaction item transaction item attributes attributes for a product

According to an embodiment, a transaction item attribute is an attributewhose value is specified or changed during a downstream business processand/or transaction (i.e., post-product definition), as part of thecreation or updating of a product occurrence. A transaction itemattribute can include metadata that comprises an internal name, adisplay name, and a description. In alternate embodiments, thetransaction item attribute can also include one or more of the followingmetadata: a sequence (an order in which the attribute will appear), atip (text that appears when user enters the attribute), a data type(such as Char, Number, Standard Date, Standard Date and Time), a column,a start date, an end date, a required flag (indicating whether theattribute is required), a “display as” indicator (indicating how theattribute is to be displayed), a hidden indicator (indicating whetherthe attribute is hidden), a read only indicator (indicating whether theattribute can be edited), a value set name, a default value, or a unitof measure class. A transaction item attribute can be stored in a childentity associated with the fulfillment order object within thedistributed order orchestration system.

According to the illustrated embodiment, at 422, one or more producttransformation rules that are implemented using business rules (i.e.,OBR-based rules, as illustrated in FIG. 4), are applied. Morespecifically, decomposition process 420 can receive a sales order thatincludes one or more facts and a fulfillment order (i.e., DOO order) toa rules engine 460 that contains one or more product transformationrules (i.e., business rules). In certain embodiments, rules engine 460also includes one or more products that are uploaded from common productmodel schema 450. The one or more product transformation rules areapplied to the fulfillment order that includes one or more facts, andrules engine 440 transmits an instance of the fulfillment order (i.e.,DOO order) that includes one or more facts to decomposition process 420.Facts are described below in greater detail. According to theembodiment, users of the distributed order orchestration system, such asbusiness analysts, can change the one or more product transformationrules (i.e., business rules) without any underlying changes to thedecomposition process. Thus, the process of changing transformationrules can be simplified because product transformation rules allowbusiness analysis to easily change product transformation rules withoutany alteration to code.

According to an embodiment, in product transformation rules, a datamodel specifies the types of facts or business objects that are used tocreate product transformation rules. A fact is an object that a rulereasons on, and a fact is an asserted instance of an object class.Examples of facts are XML schema objects, Java classes, rule language(“RL”) definitions, and ADF business component view objects.Decomposition process 420 can assert a fulfillment order (i.e., DOOorder) to rules engine 440 as facts. Any of the elements from thefulfillment order can be used to construct product transformation rules.

In certain embodiments, decomposition process 420 can use XML fact typedefinitions, and decomposition process 420 can operate on the underlyingXML before the order is persisted in a database. The XML fact typeallows selected attributes and sub-elements of an XML element or complextype to be declared to rules engine 440 so that instances of the XMLfact type can be accessed, created, modified, and deleted by rules.

In rules engine 440, facts that can be run against the producttransformation rules are data objects that have been asserted. Eachobject instance corresponds to a single fact. If an object isre-asserted (whether it has been changed or not), rules engine 440 canbe updated to reflect a new state of the object. Re-asserting the objectdoes not create a new fact. In order to have multiple facts of aparticular fact type, separate object instances must be asserted.

A rules engine decision service that is associated with rules engine 440can support both stateful and stateless interactions. A statefulinteraction maintains all instances of objects asserted throughout thesession. A stateless pattern assumes that all facts are asserted as oneunit.

Decomposition process 420 can leverage a capability of inferencing inrules engine 440 whenever there are dependencies across differenttransformation rule types and transformation rules. When one rule cancause another rule to be initiated, rules engine 440 can automaticallyinitiate the second transformation rule when the first rule changes afact in such a way that it satisfies the conditions of the second rule.When a new fact is created, rules engine 440 can take care of adding therelated rules to a set of rules to be initiated, and by that, canautomatically handle rule inference.

Rule engine 440 can include one or more rule sets, where each rule setcan include one or more product transformation rules. In certainembodiments, a rule set can contain rules whose evaluations are relatedto producing the result(s) of the rule set. In other words, a rule setcan contain rules focused on accomplishing an identical or similar goal.For example, rule sets may be organized such that a first rule setevaluates product-to-product transformations, a second rule setevaluates product-to-attribute transformations, and a third rule setevaluates attribute-to-product transformations.

In certain embodiments, one or more product transformation rules canutilize one or more RL functions. This way, the one or more producttransformation rules can share same or similar expressions by utilizingthe RL functions.

In certain embodiments, one or more product transformation rules arestored in a decision table. Product transformation rules in a decisiontable can be organized as a table that contains a tree of conditioncells and action cells. A decision table can have an if-then structure,where the if part represents a condition or pattern match, and the thenpart represents a list of actions. The if part of a rule is composed ofconditional expressions, or rule conditions, that refer to facts. Thethen part of the rule contains the actions that are executed when therule is executed.

The conditions area in a decision table can include a set of conditionexpressions. As previously described, a condition expression can applyto a fact, where a fact is an XML fact. A bucket set can be associatedwith every condition expression. A bucket set can be a local bucket setor a global bucket set. The value for a given condition cell can takeits value from one or more buckets in an associated bucket set.

At run time, whenever facts match the condition cells, the actionsassociated with the rule are executed. Whenever there is more than oneaction, the actions can be ordered, where actions appearing in earlierrows can run before actions in subsequent rows. Types of actions includeassert, assert new, assign, assign new, modify, retract, and call.

A decision table can use bucket sets to define a group of values orranges of values in the condition expressions that are part of thedecision table. The bucket set values can determine for each conditionexpression in a decision table, that it has two or more possibilities.Using a bucket set, each possibility in a condition expression isdivided into two groups where a cell specified one bucket of values fromthe bucket set.

Product transformation rules can be organized where rules for eachtransformation type are defined in different decision tables. Also,depending on the number of conditional expressions and choice of valuesfor each of the conditional expressions for which the rules are beingdefined, the rules can be organized across different decision tableseven within a given transformation type. The inference capability of therules can automatically handle any dependencies between the rules.

According to the illustrated embodiment, at 423, a fulfillment order(i.e., DOO order) is created by invoking an ADF BC service. At 424, thefulfillment order is assigned to an orchestration process, and theorchestration process is executed.

FIG. 5 illustrates an example attribute-to-product transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention. According to theembodiment, a sales order (identified in FIG. 5 as source order 510)includes a first representation of a product. In certain embodiments,the first representation of the product can include a product identity,one or more transaction item attributes, one or more context attributes,or a combination therein. More specifically, source order 510 includes aproduct identity “Nano Plus,” and includes the following set oftransaction item attributes: color (with a value of “Silver”); size(with a value of “8 MB”); and engraving (with a value of “Some Text”).Thus, within source order 510, a product is captured, based on a productidentity, where additional information about the product is captured inthe transaction item attributes.

According to the embodiment, using the information captured withinsource order 510, source order 510 is transformed into a fulfillmentorder (identified in FIG. 5 as orchestration order 520) using producttransformation table 530. More specifically, using the transaction itemattributes included within source order 510, the first representation ofthe product included within source order 510 can be transformed to asecond representation of the product that can be included withinorchestration order 520. In certain embodiments, the secondrepresentation of the product can include a product identity, one ormore transaction item attributes, one or more context attributes, or acombination therein. This transformation can be implemented bytransforming the transaction item attributes included within sourceorder 510 into a product identity included within orchestration order520 using a product identity included within product transformationtable 530. Thus, a first representation of the product included withinsource order 510 can be transformed into a second representation of theproduct included within orchestration order 520.

In certain embodiments, in orchestration order 520, the transaction itemattributes included within source order 510 are replaced with theproduct identity included within product transformation table 530.However, in alternate embodiments, the transaction item attributesincluded within source order 510 are not replaced, and instead, are alsoincluded within orchestration order 520. In these embodiments, theproduct identity included within product transformation table 530 canalso be included within orchestration order 520, in addition to thetransaction item attributes. In some of these embodiments, the productidentity included within product transformation table 530 can also beincluded within orchestration order 520 as one or more additional orderlines.

In the specific example illustrated in FIG. 5, product transformationtable 530 includes a cross-map of one or more product definitions. Oneor more product transformation rules utilize the cross-map to transformthe first representation of the product included within source order 510to the second representation of the product included withinorchestration order 520. More specifically, one or more producttransformation rules identify the color and size transaction itemattributes included within source order 510 and map the respectivevalues (i.e., “Silver” and “8 MB”) to a product identity “MA980LL/A”included within product transformation table 530, using the cross-map.The product identity “MA980LL/A” is then stored within orchestrationorder 520, replacing the color and size transaction item attributes thatwere stored within source order 510.

FIG. 6 illustrates an example context-to-product transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention. According to theembodiment, a sales order (identified in FIG. 6 as source order 610)includes a first representation of a product. In certain embodiments,the first representation of the product can include a product identity,one or more transaction item attributes, one or more context attributes,or a combination therein. More specifically, source order 610 includes aproduct identity, and also includes a context. Context refers to one ormore attributes included on an order that are not product-relatedattributes (i.e., one or more attributes that are context attributes).In the previous embodiment illustrated in FIG. 5, the set of transactionitem attributes were product-related attributes, because eachtransaction item attribute includes information related to the product.More specifically, in the previous embodiment illustrated in FIG. 5, thecolor attribute included information regarding a color of the “NanoPlus” product, the size attribute included information regarding a sizeof the “Nano Plus” product, and the engraving attribute includedinformation regarding text that is engraved on the “Nano Plus” product.In contrast, in the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 6, one or morecontext attributes can be included on an order, where the one or morecontext attributes are not related to a product. These one or morecontext attributes comprise a context of an order. More specifically, inthe illustrated embodiment of FIG. 6, source order 610 includes aproduct identity “Inspirion 1525 15.4″ HD WideScreen Laptop,” and alsoincludes a “Ship To” attribute with a value of “550 Ranch Drive, Irving,Tex., 75074.” Thus, within source order 610, a product is captured,based on a product identity, and a context is captured, where thecontext is captured in one or more context attributes.

According to the embodiment, using the information captured withinsource order 610, source order 610 is transformed into a fulfillmentorder (identified in FIG. 6 as orchestration order 620) using producttransformation table 630. More specifically, using the context (i.e.,the one or more context attributes) included within source order 610,the first representation of the product included within source order 610can be transformed to a second representation of the product that can beincluded within orchestration order 620. In certain embodiments, thesecond representation of the product can include a product identity, oneor more transaction item attributes, one or more context attributes, ora combination therein. This transformation can be implemented bytransforming the context (i.e., the one or more context attributes)included within source order 610 into a product identity included withinorchestration order 620 using a product identity included within producttransformation table 630. Thus, a first representation of the productincluded within source order 610 can be transformed into a secondrepresentation of the product included within orchestration order 620.

In certain embodiments, in orchestration order 620, an order line isadded to orchestration order 620, where the order line includes theproduct identity included within product transformation table 630.However, in alternate embodiments, the context (i.e., the one or morecontext attributes) included within source order 610 is used to includethe product per the product transformation table. In some of theseembodiments, the product identity is included within an existing orderline included within orchestration order 620.

In the specific example illustrated in FIG. 6, product transformationtable 630 includes a cross-map of one or more product definitions. Oneor more product transformation rules utilize the cross-map to transformthe first representation of the product included within source order 610to the second representation of the product included withinorchestration order 620. More specifically, one or more producttransformation rules identify the “Ship To” attribute included withinsource order 610 and map the value “550 Ranch Drive, Irving, Tex.,75054” to a product identity “330-9722” included within producttransformation table 630 that represents a 230 watt AC Adapter with a6-foot power cord, using the cross-map. The value “550 Ranch Drive,Irving, Tex., 75054” is mapped to the product identity “330-9722” basedon the fact that the value represents an address in North America, asopposed to EMEA or Asia. The product identity “330-9722” is then storedwithin orchestration order 620, as a separate order line.

FIG. 7 illustrates an example product-to-attribute transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention. According to theembodiment, a sales order (identified in FIG. 7 as source order 710)includes a first representation of a product, where source order 710also includes a set of transaction item attributes that can be used toderive a product that is required for the fulfillment process. Incertain embodiments, the first representation of the product can includea product identity, one or more transaction item attributes, one or morecontext attributes, or a combination therein. More specifically, sourceorder 710 includes a product identity “Window,” and further includes thefollowing set of transaction item attributes: width (with a value of“46″”); height (with a value of “83″”); style (with a value of“Triple-Pane”), and glass (with a value of “Standard”). Thus, withinsource order 710, a product is captured based on a product identity,where additional information about the product is captured in thetransaction item attributes.

According to the embodiment, using the information captured withinsource order 710, source order 710 is transformed into a fulfillmentorder (identified in FIG. 7 as orchestration order 720) using producttransformation table 730. More specifically, using the product identityand the transaction item attributes included within source order 710,the first representation of the product included within source order 710can be transformed to a second representation of the product that can beincluded within orchestration order 720. In certain embodiments, thesecond representation of the product can include a product identity, oneor more transaction item attributes, one or more context attributes, ora combination therein. This transformation can be implemented by addingone or more transaction item attributes to the product that is includedwithin orchestration order 720 based on the product identity that isincluded within source order 710 using a product identity includedwithin product transformation table 730. Thus, a first representation ofthe product included within source order 710 can be transformed into asecond representation of the product included within orchestration order720.

In the specific example illustrated in FIG. 7, product transformationtable 730 includes a cross-map of one or more product definitions. Oneor more product transformation rules utilize the cross-map to transformthe first representation of the product included within source order 710to the second representation of the product included withinorchestration order 720. More specifically, one or more producttransformation rules identify the style and glass transaction itemattributes included within source order 710 (and associated with theproduct identity included within source order 710) and map therespective values (i.e., “Triple-Pane” and “Standard”) to a productidentity “TP67G” included within product transformation table 730, usingthe cross-map. The product identity “TP67G” is then stored withinorchestration order 720. In addition, it is determined, based on thevalue “Standard” of the glass transaction item attribute, thatorchestration order 720 includes the following transaction itemattributes: width, height, style, and area, where area is a transactionitem attribute not included within source order 710. According to theillustrated embodiment, the width and height transaction item attributesincluded within source order 710 are converted from inches tocentimeters, and included within orchestration order 720. Furthermore,an area transaction item attribute is computed based on the width andheight transaction item attributes included within orchestration 720,and the area transaction item attribute is also included withinorchestration order 720. Thus, a new transaction item attribute iscreated based on the product identity and transaction item attributesincluded within source order 710, and the new transaction item attributeis included within orchestration order 720.

FIG. 8 illustrates an example attribute-to-attribute transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention. According to theembodiment, similar to the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 7, a salesorder (identified in FIG. 8 as source order 810) includes a firstrepresentation of a product. In certain embodiments, the firstrepresentation of the product can include a product identity, one ormore transaction item attributes, one or more context attributes, or acombination therein. More specifically, source order 810 includes aproduct identity “Window,” and further includes the following set oftransaction item attributes: width (with a value of “46″”); height (witha value of “83″”); style (with a value of “Triple-Pane”), and glass(with a value of “Standard”). Thus, within source order 810, a productis captured, based on a product identity, where additional informationabout the product is captured in the transaction item attributes.

According to the embodiment, using the information captured withinsource order 810, source order 810 is transformed into a fulfillmentorder (identified in FIG. 8 as orchestration order 820) using producttransformation table 830. More specifically, using the transaction itemattributes included within source order 810, the first representation ofthe product included within source order 810 can be transformed to asecond representation of the product that can be included withinorchestration order 820. In certain embodiments, the secondrepresentation of the product can include a product identity, one ormore transaction item attributes, one or more context attributes, or acombination therein. This transformation can be implemented bytransforming one or more transaction item attributes of the product thatis included within source order 810 into one or more transaction itemattributes of the product that is included within orchestration 820using a product included within product transformation table 830. Thus,a first representation of the product included within source order 810can be transformed into a second representation of the product includedwithin orchestration order 820.

In the specific example illustrated in FIG. 8, product transformationtable 830 includes a cross-map of one or more product definitions. Oneor more product transformation rules utilize the cross-map to transformthe first representation of the product included within source order 810to the second representation of the product included withinorchestration order 820. More specifically, one or more producttransformation rules identify the style and glass transaction itemattributes included within source order 810 and map the respectivevalues (i.e., “Triple-Pane” and “Standard”) to a product identity“TP67G” included within product transformation table 830, using thecross-map. The product identity “TP67G” is then stored withinorchestration order 820. In addition, it is determined, based on thevalue “Standard” of the glass transaction item attribute, thatorchestration order 820 includes the following transaction itemattributes: width, height, and style. According to the illustratedembodiment, the width and height transaction item attributes includedwithin source order 810 are converted from inches to centimeters, andincluded within orchestration order 820. Thus, source order 810 andorchestration order 820 can handle the width and height transaction itemattributes using different metrics.

FIG. 9 illustrates an example context-to-attribute transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention. According to theembodiment, a sales order (identified in FIG. 9 as source order 910)According to the embodiment, a sales order (identified in FIG. 9 assource order 910) includes a first representation of a product. Incertain embodiments, the first representation of the product can includea product identity, one or more transaction item attributes, one or morecontext attributes, or a combination therein. More specifically, sourceorder 910 includes a product identity, and also includes a context.Context, as previously described, refers to one or more attributesincluded on an order that are not product-related attributes (i.e., oneor more attributes that are context attributes). In the embodimentillustrated in FIG. 9, one or more context attributes can be included onan order, where the one or more context attributes are not related to aproduct. These one or more context attributes comprise a context of anorder. More specifically, in the illustrated embodiment of FIG. 9,source order 910 includes a product identity “Inspirion 1525 15.4″ HDWideScreen Laptop,” and also includes a “Ship To” attribute with a valueof “550 Ranch Drive, Irving, Tex., 75074.” Thus, within source order910, a product is captured, based on a product identity, and a contextis captured, where the context is captured in one or more contextattributes.

According to the embodiment, using the information captured withinsource order 910, source order 910 is transformed into a fulfillmentorder (identified in FIG. 9 as orchestration order 920) using producttransformation table 930. More specifically, using the context (i.e.,the one or more context attributes) included within source order 910,the first representation of the product included within source order 910can be transformed to a second representation of the product that can beincluded within orchestration order 920. In certain embodiments, thesecond representation of the product can include a product identity, oneor more transaction item attributes, one or more context attributes, ora combination therein. This transformation can be implemented bytransforming the context (i.e., the one or more context attributes)included within source order 910 into one or more transaction itemattributes included within orchestration order 920 using a productidentity included within product transformation table 930. Thus, a firstrepresentation of the product included within source order 910 can betransformed into a second representation of the product included withinorchestration order 920.

In certain embodiments, in orchestration order 920, the one or moretransaction item attributes are added to orchestration order 920.However, in alternate embodiments, the context (i.e., the one or morecontext attributes) included within source order 910 is used fordetermining one or more transaction attributes.

In the specific example illustrated in FIG. 9, product transformationtable 930 includes a cross-map of one or more product definitions. Oneor more product transformation rules utilize the cross-map to transformthe first representation of the product included within source order 910to the second representation of the product included withinorchestration order 920. More specifically, one or more producttransformation rules identify the “Ship To” attribute included withinsource order 910 and map the value “550 Ranch Drive, Irving, Tex.,75054” to a “Domestic Packing” transaction item attribute, with a valueof “Yes,” using the cross-map. The value “550 Ranch Drive, Irving, Tex.,75054” is mapped to the “Domestic Packing” transaction item attributewith a value of “Yes” based on the fact that the value represents anaddress in North America/USA. The “Domestic Packing” transaction itemattribute is then stored within orchestration order 920.

FIG. 10 illustrates an example product-to-product transformation,according to an embodiment of the invention. According to theembodiment, a sales order (identified in FIG. 10 as source order 1010)includes a first representation of a product. In certain embodiments,the first representation of the product can include a product identity,one or more transaction item attributes, one or more context attributes,or a combination therein. More specifically, source order 1010 includesa product identity “Education Kit.” Thus, within source order 1010, aproduct is captured, based on a product identity.

According to the embodiment, using the information captured withinsource order 1010, source order 1010 is transformed into a fulfillmentorder (identified in FIG. 10 as orchestration order 1020) using producttransformation table 1030. More specifically, using the product identityincluded within source order 1010 the first representation of theproduct included within source order 1010 can be transformed to a secondrepresentation of the product that can be included within orchestrationorder 1020. In certain embodiments, the second representation of theproduct can include a product identity, one or more transaction itemattributes, one or more context attributes, or a combination therein.This transformation can be implemented by replacing the product identitythat is included within source order 1010 with one or more productidentities that are included within orchestration order 1020, using oneor more product identities included within product transformation table1030. Thus, a first representation of the product included within sourceorder 1010 can be transformed into a second representation of theproduct included within orchestration order 1020.

In the specific example illustrated in FIG. 10, product transformationtable 1030 includes a cross-map of one or more product definitions. Oneor more product transformation rules utilize the cross-map to transformthe first representation of the product included within source order1010 to a second representation of the product included withinorchestration order 1020. More specifically, one or more producttransformation rules identify the product identity “Education Kit”included within source order 1010 and map the product identity to a setof two products (i.e., product identities “Education Book” and“Education CD”) included within product transformation table 1030, usingthe cross-map. The product identities “Education Book” and “EducationCD” are then stored within orchestration order 1020, replacing theproduct identity “Education Kit.” Thus, one or more product identitiesare created based on the product identity included within source order1010, and the one or more product identities are included withinorchestration order 1020.

FIG. 11 illustrates an example user interface 1100 of a distributedorder orchestration system for creating product transformation rules,according to an embodiment of the invention. According to theembodiment, the product transformation rules can be implemented in theform of business rules. While creating the product transformation rules,one or more attributes of an order object are available within userinterface 1100. The one or more attributes can include a context (i.e.,one or more context attributes), one or more transaction itemattributes, or a combination therein. These one or more attributes canbe used to determine the transformations.

According to the illustrated embodiment, user interface 1100 includessection 1110. Section 1110 can display the name of the producttransformation rule that is being created. In the illustratedembodiment, the name of the product transformation rule is “AddLine( )”User interface also includes section 1120. Section 1120 can display aroot, which is an object that the product transformation rule is appliedto, such as an order object. In the illustrated embodiment, the root is“OrderTransformationRules.Header( )” User interface also includessection 1130. Section 1130 can display an “IF” clause that includes oneor more attributes, and one or more comparison of attributes. Userinterface also includes section 1140. Section 1140 can display a “THEN”clause that includes one or more transformations. In the illustratedembodiment, section 1130 includes a comparison of an attribute on the“OrderTransformationRules.Header( )” object, and section 1140 includes atransformation that involves adding a product to the“OrderTransformationRules.Header( )” object.

FIG. 12 illustrates a flow diagram 1200 of the functionality of aproduct transformation module according to an embodiment of theinvention. In one embodiment, the functionality of flow diagram 1200 ofFIG. 12 is implemented by software stored in memory or othercomputer-readable or tangible media, and executed by a processor. Inother embodiments, the functionality may be performed by hardware (e.g.,through the use of an application specific integrated circuit (“ASIC”),a programmable gate array (“PGA”), a field programmable gate array(“FPGA”), etc.), or any combination of hardware and software.

The flow begins and then proceeds to 1210. At 1210, a sales order isreceived, where the sales order includes a first representation of aproduct. The sales order can be an order received from an order capturesystem, and can be in a first format used by the order capture system.In certain embodiments, the first representation of the product caninclude a product identity, one or more transaction item attributes, oneor more context attributes, or a combination therein. The flow thenproceeds to 1220. At 1220, one or more product transformation rules areevaluated. The flow then proceeds to 1230. At 1230, the firstrepresentation of the product is transformed into a secondrepresentation of the product based on the one or more producttransformation rules. In certain embodiments, the second representationof the product can include a product identity, one or more transactionitem attributes, one or more context attributes, or a combinationtherein. The flow then proceeds to 1240. At 1240, the sales order istransformed into a fulfillment order, where the fulfillment order can bein a second format used by a distributed order orchestration system. Thefirst format used by the order capture system can be a different formatthan the second format used by the distributed order orchestrationsystem. The flow then proceeds to 1250. At 1250, the secondrepresentation of the product is stored within the fulfillment order.The flow then ends.

According to certain embodiments, the transformation of the firstrepresentation of the product into the second representation of theproduct includes a transformation of one or more transaction itemattributes into a product identity. In alternate embodiments, thetransformation of the first representation of the product into thesecond representation of the product includes a transformation of one ormore context attributes into a product identity. In other embodiments,the transformation of the first representation of the product into thesecond representation of the product includes a transformation of aproduct identity into one or more transaction item attributes. Inalternate embodiments, the transformation of the first representation ofthe product into the second representation of the product includes atransformation of one or more transaction item attributes into one ormore different transaction item attributes. In other embodiments, thetransformation of the first representation of the product into thesecond representation of the product includes a transformation of one ormore context attributes into one or more transaction item attributes. Inalternate embodiments, the transformation of the first representation ofthe product into the second representation of the product includes atransformation of a product identity into one or more different productidentities.

In certain embodiments, the one or more product transformation rulesinclude a product information management entity, where the productinformation management entity includes one or more relationships betweenone or more products. In other embodiments, the one or more producttransformation rules include one or more business rules, where eachbusiness rule of the one or more business rules includes business logicthat controls operation of the business rule. In other embodiments, someof the one or more product transformation rules include a productinformation management entity, and some of the one or more producttransformation rules include one or more business rules.

Thus, according to an embodiment, fulfillment-related product detailsthat are required for fulfillment can be segregated from sales-relatedproduct details, thus simplifying the ordering process, and eliminatingcomplexity that arises from having fulfillment-related product detailspresent on the sales order. With the product transformation rulescapabilities within the distributed order orchestration system, an ordercapture system can have a more customer-centric representation of theproduct, and the fulfillment systems can have a different representationof the product. A product and its attributes can be modeled from aperspective of what is required to be captured when entering the order,and can be enriched with fulfillment-related product details, ortransformed into products that are required to fulfill the order.Therefore, embodiments of the invention can overcome disadvantages withconventional order management solutions, where sales products aremodeled with details that are required during a fulfillment process. Theproduct transformation rules can facilitate a clear delineation betweena sales-centric view of an order and a fulfillment-centric view of anorder.

The features, structures, or characteristics of the invention describedthroughout this specification may be combined in any suitable manner inone or more embodiments. For example, the usage of “one embodiment,”“some embodiments,” “certain embodiment,” “certain embodiments,” orother similar language, throughout this specification refers to the factthat a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described inconnection with the embodiment may be included in at least oneembodiment of the present invention. Thus, appearances of the phrases“one embodiment,” “some embodiments,” “a certain embodiment,” “certainembodiments,” or other similar language, throughout this specificationdo not necessarily all refer to the same group of embodiments, and thedescribed features, structures, or characteristics may be combined inany suitable manner in one or more embodiments.

One having ordinary skill in the art will readily understand that theinvention as discussed above may be practiced with steps in a differentorder, and/or with elements in configurations which are different thanthose which are disclosed. Therefore, although the invention has beendescribed based upon these preferred embodiments, it would be apparentto those of skill in the art that certain modifications, variations, andalternative constructions would be apparent, while remaining within thespirit and scope of the invention. In order to determine the metes andbounds of the invention, therefore, reference should be made to theappended claims.

We claim:
 1. A computer-readable medium having instructions storedthereon that, when executed by a processor, cause the processor totransform a sales order that comprises a product into a fulfillmentorder within a distributed orchestration system, the transformingcomprising: receiving the sales order, wherein the sales order comprisesa first representation of a product, and wherein the sales order is anorder received from an order capture system and is in a first formatused by the order capture system; evaluating one or more producttransformation rules; transforming the first representation of theproduct into a second representation of the product based on the one ormore product transformation rules; transforming the sales order into thefulfillment order, wherein the fulfillment order is in a second formatused by the distributed order orchestration system; and storing thesecond representation of the product within the fulfillment order. 2.The computer-readable medium of claim 1, the transforming the firstrepresentation of the product into the second representation of theproduct further comprising transforming one or more transaction itemattributes into a product identity.
 3. The computer-readable medium ofclaim 1, the transforming the first representation of the product intothe second representation of the product further comprising transformingone or more context attributes into a product identity.
 4. Thecomputer-readable medium of claim 1, the transforming the firstrepresentation of the product into the second representation of theproduct further comprising transforming a product identity into one ormore transaction item attributes.
 5. The computer-readable medium ofclaim 1, the transforming the first representation of the product intothe second representation of the product further comprising transformingone or more transaction item attributes into one or more differenttransaction item attributes.
 6. The computer-readable medium of claim 1,the transforming the first representation of the product into the secondrepresentation of the product further comprising transforming one ormore context attributes into one or more transaction item attributes. 7.The computer-readable medium of claim 1, the transforming the firstrepresentation of the product into the second representation of theproduct further comprising transforming a product identity into one ormore different product identities.
 8. The computer-readable medium ofclaim 1, wherein the one or more product transformation rules comprise aproduct information management entity, wherein the product informationmanagement entity comprises one or more relationships between one ormore products.
 9. The computer-readable medium of claim 1, wherein theone or more product transformation rules comprise one or more businessrules, wherein each business rule of the one or more business rulescomprises business logic that controls operation of the business rule.10. A computer-implemented method for transforming a sales order thatcomprises a product into a fulfillment order within a distributed orderorchestration system, the computer-implemented method comprising:receiving the sales order, wherein the sales order comprises a firstrepresentation of a product, and wherein the sales order is an orderreceived from an order capture system and is in a first format used bythe order capture system; evaluating one or more product transformationrules; transforming the first representation of the product into asecond representation of the product based on the one or more producttransformation rules; transforming the sales order into the fulfillmentorder, wherein the fulfillment order is in a second format used by thedistributed order orchestration system; and storing the secondrepresentation of the product within the fulfillment order.
 11. Thecomputer-implemented method of claim 10, the transforming the firstrepresentation of the product into the second representation of theproduct further comprising transforming one or more transaction itemattributes into a product identity.
 12. The computer-implemented methodof claim 10, the transforming the first representation of the productinto the second representation of the product further comprisingtransforming one or more context attributes into a product identity. 13.The computer-implemented method of claim 10, the transforming the firstrepresentation of the product into the second representation of theproduct further comprising transforming a product identity into one ormore transaction item attributes.
 14. The computer-implemented method ofclaim 10, the transforming the first representation of the product intothe second representation of the product further comprising transformingone or more transaction item attributes into one or more differenttransaction item attributes.
 15. The computer-implemented method ofclaim 10, the transforming the first representation of the product intothe second representation of the product further comprising transformingone or more context attributes into one or more transaction itemattributes.
 16. The computer-implemented method of claim 10, thetransforming the first representation of the product into the secondrepresentation of the product further comprising transforming a productidentity into one or more different product identities.
 17. Adistributed order orchestration system, comprising: a sales orderreceiving module configured to receive a sales order, wherein the salesorder comprises a first representation of a product, and wherein thesales order is an order received from an order capture system and is ina first format used by the order capture system; a producttransformation rule evaluation module configured to evaluate one or moreproduct transformation rules; a product representation transformationmodule configured to transform the first representation of the productinto a second representation of the product based on the one or moreproduct transformation rules; an order transformation module configuredto transform the sales order into a fulfillment order, wherein thefulfillment order is in a second format used by the distributed orderorchestration system; and an order storage module configured to storethe second representation of the product within the fulfillment order.18. The distributed order orchestration system of claim 17, the productrepresentation transformation module further configured to transform oneor more transaction item attributes into a product identity.
 19. Thedistributed order orchestration system of claim 17, the productrepresentation transformation module further configured to transform oneor more context attributes into a product identity.
 20. The distributedorder orchestration system of claim 17, the product representationtransformation module further configured to transform a product identityinto one or more transaction item attributes.